Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"Marier P" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Older Adults in Administrative Quagmire: A Scoping Review of Policy and Program Coordination Across 6 Marginalized Older Adult Populations Marier P; Joy M; Smele S; Zakaria R; Beauchamp J; Bourgeois-Guérin V; Lupien PL; Sussman T; 39211980
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Who Cares? Preferences for Formal and Informal Care Among Older Adults in Québec Lee K; Revelli M; Dickson D; Marier P; 34886702
CONCORDIA
3 COVOID-19 and Long-Term Care Policy for Older People in Canada. Béland D, Marier P 32419658
CONCORDIA
4 Ageism and COVID-19: What does our society's response say about us? Fraser S, Lagacé M, Bongué B, Ndeye N, Guyot J, Bechard L, Garcia L, Taler V, CCNA Social Inclusion and Stigma Working Group, Adam S, Beaulieu M, Bergeron CD, Boudjemadi V, Desmette D, Donizzetti AR, Éthier S, Garon S, Gillis M, Levasseur M, Lortie-Lussier M, Marier P, Robitaille A, Sawchuk K, Lafontaine C, Tougas F 32377666
PSYCHOLOGY
5 Precarity and Aging: A Scoping Review. Grenier A, Hatzifilalithis S, Laliberte-Rudman D, Kobayashi K, Marier P, Phillipson C 31675418
CONCORDIA

 

Title:Who Cares? Preferences for Formal and Informal Care Among Older Adults in Québec
Authors:Lee KRevelli MDickson DMarier P
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34886702/
DOI:10.1177/0733464820976436
Publication:Journal of applied gerontology : the official journal of the Southern Gerontological Society
Keywords:CanadaQuébeccare preferencescaregivingformal caregenderinformal care
PMID:34886702 Category: Date Added:2021-12-10
Dept Affiliation: CONCORDIA
1 Daegu University, Gyeongsan-si, Republic of Korea.
2 Concordia University, Montreal, Québec, Canada.

Description:

Policy makers, practitioners, and scholars are increasingly examining the types of care services (formal vs. informal) offered to older adults. This study evaluates predictors of these adults' preferences for care types in Québec, Canada, based on a province-wide survey inserted in a magazine of the largest seniors' club in Canada (FADOQ). More than twice as many respondents indicated a preference for formal rather than informal care. Multinomial logistic regressions demonstrate that older adults' past and current experiences and perceptions of formal and informal services continue to play an important role in their preference formation regarding care services. The study determined that preferring informal care is significantly more prevalent when one is accustomed to this type of care, and that men are significantly more likely to prefer informal care than women, and that lower-income individuals are less likely to favor formal care.





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